The American Museum of Natural History in New York also has a mounted thylacine but I don't know if it's currently on show.I know there's one at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. I'm not sure there are any others in American museums.
The American Museum of Natural History in New York also has a mounted thylacine but I don't know if it's currently on show.I know there's one at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. I'm not sure there are any others in American museums.
The Museum of Natural Sciences in Brussel have one.On a related question, where can one see a (mounted) thylacine now?
Is the one at the Natural History Museum in London the only exhibited specimen, or are there other places? Is the one in London still on exhibit?
Verified for Tring and Jardin des Plantes.There are specimens at the Kendal Museum (World Wildlife Gallery | Kendal Museum), the Grand Gallery of Evolution in Paris (Paris , Grand Gallery of Evolution , Jardin des Plantes - ZooChat) and the Natural History Museum at Tring (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_History_Museum_at_Tring).
The Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery has a mounted specimen, as well as skeletons and pelts.On a related question, where can one see a (mounted) thylacine now?
Is the one at the Natural History Museum in London the only exhibited specimen, or are there other places? Is the one in London still on exhibit?
There’s at least one on show at TringThe Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery has a mounted specimen, as well as skeletons and pelts.
The American History Museum has two thylacine taxidermies,one of a male and one of a female.Both specimens came from the Bronx Zoo after they died,the male's skin belongs to the second thylacine of the zoo,and the female's skin belongs to the last thylacine of the zoo.The American Museum of Natural History in New York also has a mounted thylacine but I don't know if it's currently on show.
Thanks for this. Do you know if they are currently on display at the museum?The American History Museum has two thylacine taxidermies,one of a male and one of a female.Both specimens came from the Bronx Zoo after they died,the male's skin belongs to the second thylacine of the zoo,and the female's skin belongs to the last thylacine of the zoo.
I dont know if they are on display.But Bronx Zoo's second thylacine came from a litter of three joeys,you probably know them as the Woolnorth family(mum two males and a female,photo above,taken when the joeys were 8 months old in 1909),the female and one of the males were shipped in the London zoo by the Hobart Zoo in 1910,the male survived,his sister didnt manage to survive,his brother arrived a year later in 1911 and then as you said was shipped in the bronx zoo on January of 1912,where he survived for 10 months until his death on November of the same year.Thanks for this. Do you know if they are currently on display at the museum?
(Incidentally, Bronx Zoo's second thylacine was London Zoo's nineteenth thylacine; it was purchased from London Zoo in January 1912.)
Fascinatiing photo! Thank you for sharing. It's been fascinating learning about the thylacine, but true my a major heart breaking tragedy of this species.A little late in this convo but here's a newly discovered photo of the last captive thylacine aka Benjamin.The photo was taken on January of 1936,8 months before his death.Also if you dont already know there are 117 known Thylacine photos and 13 thylacine films(2 of them are considered lost).Lastly Im new here so sorry if this post doesnt fit here![]()
There are heaps of Thylacines in museums. Just in the Zoochat galleries there are about a dozen examples.
A quick google search doesn't turn up any results for a collective noun. Pack seems the obvious choice because Thylacines are very doglike but surely we could come up with something a bit more creative.This got me thinking and that hurts so I shall ask...
What is a group of Thylacines called, what is their collective terminology known as?
Is there one?
Even better, if there isn't one, can we invent one?......
This got me thinking and that hurts so I shall ask...
What is a group of Thylacines called, what is their collective terminology known as?
Is there one?
Even better, if there isn't one, can we invent one?......
A quick google search doesn't turn up any results for a collective noun. Pack seems the obvious choice because Thylacines are very doglike but surely we could come up with something a bit more creative.
alliteration
noun [ U ]
LITERATURE specialized
UK
/əˌlɪt.əˈreɪ.ʃən/ US
/əˌlɪt̬.əˈreɪ.ʃən/
especially in poetry, of the same sound or sounds, especially consonants, at the beginning of several words that are close together:
"Round the rugged rocks the ragged rascal ran" uses alliteration.